Archive for the ‘Terrain’ Category

The Devourers of Worlds: Getting the Most from a Tyranid Army (pt 3)

by Wintermute - April 21st, 2010

(Continued from last week’s post by WHITE MAN’S MINIS)

This Genestealer counts as a Space Marine in Apocalypse games.

This Genestealer counts as a Space Marine in Apocalypse games.

With the advent of Apocalypse comes a whole new world of Tyranid conversion opportunities. I thought it would be fun to convert some Genestealer-like Tyranids with guns to play as counts-as Space Marines. Eventually the plan is to give them a counts-as Rhino based upon the Malefactor, an old Tyranid from the game Epic and produced for 40k by Armorcast. The Malefactor was a troop transport and it would be a great challenge to try to convert up a living beast that could carry ten Space Marine equivalents.

Superheavies

The Tyranid Trygon appears in an Apocalypse datasheet, but the Forge World model carries a hefty pricetag. Old Alien toys make a great basis for Tyranid conversions – this Trygon was made from an enlarged Carnifex and the tail from a Snake Alien toy by Hasbro.

Trygon (more…)

Cheap Terrain: Ridiculously Easy Tau Barricades

by Wintermute - March 24th, 2010

(Courtesy of Fenn the Fool)

Today we’re starting a new feature (one that will probably last all of 2-3 iterations): Cheap Terrain. Theoretically, this will be a series of articles about cheap (and relatively easy) terrain that YOU TOO can make in your spare time. It’s fun and easy!!! With that out of the way, let’s get on with our first article: Ridiculously easy Tau barricades.

Total cost: $4.00-$7.00

Materials:

  • Puzzle ball bank (available from here)

Instructions:

Disassemble the puzzle ball, and reassemble bits of it as shown below. Each individual ball makes one large barricade and two small ones, with two pieces identical to the roof of the large barricade left over. Put a coat of paint on top and add decals to taste.

Pictures:

Making cardboard buildings

by enri - September 16th, 2009

There just isn’t enough terrain making articles or guides online, I sometimes feel like the whole hobby has been swamped by store bought kits and whilst they’re gorgeous and do have their uses, I can’t help but feel loads of you gamer types are being cheated out of the incredibly wholesome hobby that is terrain making. It’s like spending a Sunday afternoon baking cakes but better.

My main goal is to help those who don’t think that they’re capable of making terrain by showing them how easy it can be by using just a handful of materials and tools that should be accessible to everyone. I’ll be entertaining more exotic tools and crazy techniques with which to hurt yourself at a later date but my first bunch of articles will most likely concentrate on getting decent results with basic techniques and materials so everyone has a chance to have a play.

If you’ve been there, seen it, done it etc. then please hang around anyway, I’d love your thoughts and feedback.

Why?!

Why make your own terrain? A few reasons spring to mind:

  1. It’s satisfying! – when was the last time you actually made something from scratch?
  2. It’s very green – welcome to the dark side of recycling.
  3. It’s cheap! – the main driving factor for most people.

Getting Started

Tools

  • sharp modelling knife
  • ruler
  • wood glue
  • pencil

Materials

  • cereal packet card!

Today we’re going to make something out of… wait for it… cereal packet card! Hopefully you’re a god fearing cereal eater like the rest of us and can lay your hands on some kind of thin card, it doesn’t necessarily have to be cereal packet card but just any kind of thin card disguised as packaging will do. As long as it’s not embossed then it’s all good, you have no idea how out of place the Kellogs logo looks in the 41st millennium.

You’ll see that you don’t really need a lot; something sharp, something straight, something sticky and something pencily. Oh and something materialy.

For this article, I’m going to keep it simple and make a simple fantasy house / hut / call it whatever you will. It will have 4 walls, a roof, a door and maybe a window if the occupants are lucky and I’m going to make it using nothing but cereal packet card and wood glue.

Working with card, and indeed any other sheet material, is simply a case of ‘flattening’ your design out, take a look at this and try and work out what the hell it is:

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Four walls? check… Roof? check… That’s the basic plans for my fantasy house. Let’s make that template a little more workable and less basic:

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I’ve added tabs to the areas that will need them and I’ve also chopped the 4 walls into two seperate sections with 2 walls apiece. This is just to make it easier in transferring the design on to the card (as not many cereal packets will stretch to fitting all four walls on in one big long strip)

So if you’re still following me then you should have something that looks similar to the above, it doesn’t have to be a perfect replica, just a basic shape will do with some basic features.

The next step

Now, if you drew your plan straight onto your cereal packet card then bravo, you can skip the next step you clever little bean.. but if you didn’t, just tape the plan on to your cereal packet card, take a pin and poke a hole through the plan AND the card at the end of every straight line (what? no straight lines? use a ruler you tool) – once you’ve done that, simply connect the dots and et voila! As if by magic, your building plan has been transferred to the cereal packet card! It should look something like this:

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Now cut that shit out. Use a ruler (preferably metal, plastic rulers have a tendency to enjoy being cut by sharp blades) and a sharp knife and cut your walls and roof out, be sure to cut out any windows and doors as well. We’ll sort them out when it comes to detailing.

You should have something looking like this on your desk:

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The more astute of you will notice the ‘A4′ on my cutting board and will then be questioning the scale of this building, yes, I made it a bit smaller than I normally would, mostly for speed but everything is still applicable, even at a larger size.

Before you go any further, it’s worth taking the time to score the card where it will be bent. It’s always best to score on the outside of the bend, i.e. on the side that will be facing outwards. Take your ruler and a knife and gently run the blade across the card, basically make a very slight cut into the card but not through it.

Getting sticky

Next up, the easy bit. Wood glue is perfect. I’ve found it best if you put wood glue on both sides to be joined, wipe most of it away with a scrap of card so that you’re left with a thin coat of glue and then slap them together. They should grip together pretty firmly right from the word go but it’s still best to leave it to cure overnight. Once you’ve gotten everything glued together then it should look something like this:

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If it doesn’t, you went wrong somewhere. Go back to the start and try again.

If it does, congratulations! You’ve taken your first step into terrain making. It’s all down hill from here. If you’re worried that it looks a bit like a few sheets of cardboard glued together at the moment then that’s ok… because that’s what it is. I’ll cover detailing with cereal packet card in the next article… here’s a sneak peek. Oooh thrilling stuff.

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Terrain by Pagan

by Pagan - September 15th, 2009

I use many different materials to build buildings. I base them one 1/4″ MDF board cut into different sizes, but the buildings themselves can be made out of many things.

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I got this thick plasticard from another warham; I think it’s 1/8 or 1/16th of an inch thick. It’s very sturdy, but also hard to cut.

Foamcore is the standard for lots of people. It’s relatively easy to cut, but it can be flimsy and it tends to warp.

The 1/2″ pink insulation foam is great because you can carve lots of stuff into it, and cut it into lots of shapes. The downside is it has almost no structural strength, and it dulls knives FAST.

Finally, I use .030″ plasticard for surface details. I’m fortunate enough to live nearby a plant that manufactures it, so I get huge sheets for next to nothing.

The big metal ruler has a felt backing, which is important to keep it from slipping when making cuts. The transparent T-square helps keep lines straight, and the sharpie marker will write on just about any surface.

Clothespins make great impromptu clamps while waiting for glue to dry. The elmer’s white glue is great for most surfaces, but if I’m bonding plastic to plastic I use Methyl Ethyl Ketone. The rubber cement comes in handy a lot, too.

Finally, I’ve been using a utility knife a lot recently. The blades are cheap and pretty durable, which helps make it better than the standard X acto knife.

Next, I’m going to go over the steps I take to cut out a building. This is probably very basic for anyone else who does terrain, but I’m including it for complete newbies. Accuracy is important, and I also like to minimize the various steps I take. Trying to cut out each piece seperately takes forever, and you tend to end up with different sized pieces. This makes assembly difficult. I guess if you’re building Ork stuff that’s fine, but I’m fond of my imperial buildings.

Once you’ve figured out the measurements of your building, you’re going to add them together like the picture shows. This way, when we cut, we’ll end up with all our pieces the same size. Don’t cut yet, though, just mark the dimensions on the foamcore.

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The next step is to mark out our windows and doors. Since all the big pieces are still lined up, this will make sure that everything lines up. In a one story building, it’s not a huge deal, but if you’re doing several stories it will look better if everything lines up.

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After you’ve marked all the doors and windows, all the lines can get confusing. I like to use different colors of pen to mark things so I don’t cut the wrong thing, and I mark the pieces to be removed with an X.

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To minimize the time spent cutting, cut all the way across one line first, making sure to skip the spaces in between. Be careful at this point, but it’s not the end of the world if you end up with a window that’s double width every now and then.

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Once you’ve got all the doors and windows removed, you can cut out the big pieces. Again, it’s much easier to do a few big long cuts. I do the longest big cuts first, then the shorter cuts last.

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Here is a building I’ve been working on this week. The base is made from foamcore, the bricks and door are from a cut up cereal box. I used spackle on the edges to hide the bare foam.

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Next, the base. The base is built from a lot of different parts. I started with a base of MDF board, 12 x 6 inches. I had a big piece of foam about the same size, from some kinda packaging, so I glued that on top. Then I realized I needed a way for models to get up and down, so I built the ramp and glued that onto the side. I had originally planned on stairs, but didn’t have enough room.

One of the big problems with using foam is even after you paint it, it just looks like foam you slapped paint on. The solution is to cover the surface with something. Anything. You can use sand, spackle, paper mache, anything. For this, I used all three. I put spackle over the surface to make it flat. To fill in gaps and cover the joins between the ramp and the foam, I used paper mache.

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The ladder on the backside is just bent florists wire, stuck into the foam.

The brickwork is easy to do, and looks great once it’s painted. First, I covered the foam with spackle and let that dry.

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Then, I took a Dremel tool, and carved in the shapes of the bricks. Finally, I sanded it down to remove the texture and any rough edges.

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I did this on the top and the sides of the big base.

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Finally, to make the pink foam look more distressed, I airbrushed Acetone onto it. The Harbor Freight airbrush lets me spray a little or a lot, and since the acetone dissolves the foam, I could slowly distress it further if I wanted.

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The next part of the building I made out of foamcore. I used cereal box cardboard for the edges. To do the textured plaster, I stippled the surface with an old paintbrush before it dried.

The framing around the upper window is more pink insulation foam. You can also see how I used spackle to fill in the inside of the windows, so you couldn’t see the seam and the exposed foam.

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Finally, the building needs a roof. I used the thick black plasticard to make the basic structure, then cereal box cardboard to do both the wooden planks on the ends, and the shingles. The shingles look a lot more complicated than they are.

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Test fit everything to make sure it looks good.

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Next, I wanted to even up some areas, cover some seams, and make sure the distressed areas looked good and busted up. So I glued sand onto certain places, and let it dry.

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After that, it was just a simple matter of painting. I used an airbrush to apply the base coats, and did so in several layers, lightening and darkening the color with each layer so it wasn’t a smooth perfect shade. Some thin black paint made a perfect wash, then a little drybrushing to highlight. The final step was gluing on the flocking, then some dullcote for protection.

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